Greg Linden is a
Research Associate at the Institute for
Business Innovation, a research unit at Berkeley’s Haas School of
Business, working with Professor David Teece. His current work concerns the analysis of global value
chain dynamics, with a particular emphasis on the ability of firms to
shape industry outcomes.

While a researcher at CWTS, Greg and Professor Clair Brown conducted a
multi-year study of the globalization of semiconductor design and
fabrication, with support from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and
Doshisha University. Early results were published through the
Brookings Institution and the National Academy of Engineering. Their
book, Chips and Change: How Crisis Reshapes the
Semiconductor Industry, was published by MIT Press in
September 2009, with an updated paperback edition released in August 2011. (See also: chipsandchange.com)

2003 (with Clair Brown and Melissa
Appleyard), "The Net World Order's Influence on Global Leadership in
the Semiconductor Industry," in Martin Kenney and Richard Florida,
eds., Locating Global Advantage: Industry Dynamics in the
International Economy, Stanford University Press. [An earlier
working paper version of this chapter ("The Semiconductor Industry's
Role in the Net World Order") can be downloaded here.]

2000 (with David C. Mowery and
Rosemarie Ham Ziedonis), "National Technology Policy in Global Markets:
Developing Next-Generation Lithography in the Semiconductor Industry" Business
and Politics, v.2, n.2, pp.93-113. [An analysis of the Intel-led
Cooperative R&D Agreement with three Department of Energy labs to
develop a new manufacturing tool]

1998 (with Rose Marie Ham and Melissa M. Appleyard), "The Evolving Role
of Semiconductor Consortia in the U.S. and Japan," California
Management Review, v.41, n.1, pp. 137-163. NOTE: This is an
analysis of the semiconductor industry's high-stakes shift from 200mm
to 300mm silicon wafers.

2002 (with Steven White), "Organizational
And Industrial Response To Market Liberalization: The Interaction Of
Pace, Incentive And Capacity To Change," Organization Studies, v.23,
n.6. [An analysis of the interaction of the pace of transition to
capitalism and the ability of mangers to adapt using a comparison of
the television manufacturing industries in Poland and China.]

2000, "Industrial Policy, Technology,
and Performance: Lessons From The East Asian Electronics Industry," PhD
dissertation. (uses detailed comparative case studies of several
electronics sectors in Korea and Taiwan to explore hypotheses related
to the interaction between industrial policy and industrial structure
in developing countries)

2000 "Japan and the United States in the Malaysian Electronics Sector,"
pp.202-229 in Michael Borrus, Dieter Ernst, and Stephan Haggard, eds., Rivalry
or Riches: International Production Networks in Asia, Routledge.

1998 "Building Production Networks
in Central Europe: The Case of the Electronics Industry," pp. 255-272
in John Zysman and Andrew Schwartz, eds., Enlarging Europe: the
Industrial Foundations of a New Political Reality, Berkeley, CA:
IAS [downloadable as BRIE WP#126,
"Building Production Networks in Central Europe: The Case of the
Electronics Industry"]